Waquoit
Mr. Positive
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2011
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Only becuase of the lobster they stuck in it. I doubt it was any better than the one I had last weekend at Costa del Sol.That's one hell of a paella.
Only becuase of the lobster they stuck in it. I doubt it was any better than the one I had last weekend at Costa del Sol.That's one hell of a paella.
If you spend a week backcountry camping and hiking in Denali and eating GORP and dried food, you will gladly order and eat whatever warm meal they are serving at the first establishment where you can get one.If you go all the way to Alaska and order pizza, you are doing it wrong.
And that's coming from a pizza hound.
As far as I can tell the only pizza place in Skagway is Northern Lights Pizza. I'm sure their pizza is just swell.
I was just in Vancouver in May for business and didn't have a ton of recreational time but I did do Capilano. My expectations weren't very high and I was pleasantly surprised. Its reasonably priced and I thought it was very well done and the free bus ride from downtown was a bonus. Lots of fabulous views: cliff walk, bridge of death and elevated walkways through the trees. Its certainly going to take over an hour to get through everything here and you could probably make a half-day out of it. I didn't do Grouse Mtn but I'd guess that if you drive yourself to Capilano and are already on that side of the bridge you can do both in the same day.
My wife did Granville Island while I was working. She's not a big shopper and said it was neat and everything but didn't spend a ton of time there.
There's a ton of good Asian dining in the city, most of it quite casual. If you decide to go for an upscale meal I had a couple of real good ones. The views (and food) at Five Sails were great and the seafood at Blue Water Cafe was excellent.
Ironically, also the name of a stripper working at Brandi's in Vancouver. Perfect vacation stop segue.In Ketchikan make sure to either take a boat or seaplane to see the Misty Fjords.
Sounds like someone is pining for the fjords.Ironically, also the name of a stripper working at Brandi's in Vancouver. Perfect vacation stop segue.
By the way, I'm looking forward to hearing the description of the person driving the 2:00 a.m. shuttle from the airport back to the hotel when you return.
Alaska deep water is not like long island or anything on the east coast. It is a insane. My family still talk about it being the worse 10 hours of their life. (Not mine probably 2nd, I jumped into the Nile and had the worse 30hours humanly possible)
How was the paella?Had to call an audible.
Next door neighbor predicted that my wife would sleep in the car before the Newark Ramada, so we opted for the Courtyard which was just remodeled.
It was fine. $229, which included 14 nights parking and airport shuttle.
But we got a chance to take their 3 am shuttle. The driver was sober and hardly terrifying.
Instead of just taking us to the Air Train, he took us to the terminal. Saved us 15 minutes which got us through TSA's lunacy before the masses.
Next up - a review of Newark airport, gate C80. How does it stack up to C79 and C81? Find out next!
How was the paella?
Our vacation in Newark flew by.
After arriving at 10 pm, we considered our recreational options and chose sleeping. After waking up at 2:55 am, we were whisked to the airport by a cheerful Russian person. Sum total of the conversation - "You want I skip train and take to airport?" Yes, Vlad. Yes.
After noticing several dozen TSA workers standing around doing nothing, I made a note to like JSM's next post on the working habits of public employees. But the ones that were working completed their review of our travel documents and decided that our footwear posed no danger to the airliner and we were allowed to mosey to gate C80.
Good gate to have. Made gate C90 look like something you'd set aside for livestock or other people's children.
There was no paella on offer. There were about 30 bars open, but we had to wait until 5 to have breakfast.
Opted for a plain cinnamon raisin bagel and some grapes. The bagel was burned but I actually like it that way, so thumbs up. The grapes were delightful and almost worth the $5.97 we paid for them. The wife and daughter each had a muffin and pineapple. I didn't ask for their thoughts.
Boarding was uneventful.
We're flying United for the first time. I have sized up the flight attendants and if they want to brawl as is their wont, they will not soon forget the thrashing I'll mete out. There are three of them on the plane and all of them would fit in an overhead bin, so I have my plan of attack if things start to go sideways here.
The plane is an AirBus A320. It is far too small to fly across a continent, but it is because it's United and the big planes mean passengers have more open field to run when trying to evade capture. The captain's name is Mark and the First Officer's name is who cares, he's not the captain.
The snack is something called a "stroopwafel". It looks like a flat waffle with sugar on it. I have not tried it - I'm saving mine for bartering when/if society in the cabin breaks down. I've collected the stroopwafels from my wife and daughter. I believe three will make a fine trade and allow us to take ownership of the family behind us - I've always wanted litter-bearers.
Cultural note: Flight 1778 is a diverse bunch. There are many Japanese and Indians on the flight.
The Japanese all fell asleep the second they sat down. They are all asleep. It is a remarkable and useful talent.
The Indians are the exact opposite. They are all over the plane. Some of them will hit their Fitbit numbers before we land.
The Indian gentleman in front of me reclined his seat and then bounced in and out of it for the first two hours of the flight. I don't mind the reclining, but the bouncing is compressing my kneecaps. He has gone to sit elsewhere, so I have returned his seat to the upright position. If he comes back, we will talk.
I am bored. I have hit the point where my daughter realizes that I am not actually listening and she has taken that as a challenge to double her efforts to engage me in conversation. I am realizing why there are 30 bars near C80.
(Big plus for Canada - when the bill comes, they show up with a credit card reader and handle the transaction right there. No watching your card disappear for ten minutes. Canada is way ahead on the tap and pay curve.)
Vancouver- Beautiful city and the Pan Pacific is one of the nicest hotels I've stayed in. Hung out with some Canadians last weekend and they reinforced to me that Canadians are the friendliest/coolest people on earth.
The Pan Pacific was very nice - we stayed at the Fairmont on the return trip and I recommend that as well. The Fairmont has check-in nailed - they send you an email in the morning asking when you want to arrive. Press the button you want and you are checked in. Once you get there, a concierge desk hands you an envelope with your name on it. Keys and such are inside. That is the only time you need to interact with anyone at the hotel.
The Pan Pacific has a private check-in for club levels, but it was a little clunky the day we were there. It's no faster than regular check-in, but you get to wait in a much nicer area.
Also...if you're traveling alone or if you're a couple and you know you need just one bed, book a room with a good cancellation policy wherever you're going as back up and then haunt Hotels Tonight in the last days before you visit. They cannot guarantee a room type which was a deal breaker for me traveling with the family, but if you knew you needed just one bed, you could have rented a room at the PP for about $650 less than I paid for that weekend.
Every luxe hotel in Vancouver - Fairmonts, Trump, Pan Pacific - had rooms on their service on the day we arrived and they were going for hundreds less a night than they were online.
You're single.I have a hard time understanding, "hundreds less a night" when the most I've ever spent for a room was ~ $80.
I guess it's time to once again look into using the couple hundred thousand reward points I have from Chase.
The Pan Pacific was very nice - we stayed at the Fairmont on the return trip and I recommend that as well. The Fairmont has check-in nailed - they send you an email in the morning asking when you want to arrive. Press the button you want and you are checked in. Once you get there, a concierge desk hands you an envelope with your name on it. Keys and such are inside. That is the only time you need to interact with anyone at the hotel.
The Pan Pacific has a private check-in for club levels, but it was a little clunky the day we were there. It's no faster than regular check-in, but you get to wait in a much nicer area.
Also...if you're traveling alone or if you're a couple and you know you need just one bed, book a room with a good cancellation policy wherever you're going as back up and then haunt Hotels Tonight in the last days before you visit. They cannot guarantee a room type which was a deal breaker for me traveling with the family, but if you knew you needed just one bed, you could have rented a room at the PP for about $650 less than I paid for that weekend.
Every luxe hotel in Vancouver - Fairmonts, Trump, Pan Pacific - had rooms on their service on the day we arrived and they were going for hundreds less a night than they were online.
Hotel tonight has been the secret weapon to my life the last couple years. Fantastic app. Don't use it until day of stay though...
You're single.
Conversations you don't want to have to with your wife:
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"But, honey, it was less that $80 bucks a night."
I yield to your expertise.That one looks more like a by the hour, bring your own sheets, hotel.

I would actually say to start a few days out.
Stuff comes and goes and you absolutely know where you want to stay, you could have nailed down a deal three days out in some cases.

@Fishy, sorry to dredge up an old thread, but I'm headed to Vancouver with my wife for a few days this weekend. Flying into Seattle (from Newark!) and driving up to Vancouver. Staying 3 nights and then 1 night back in Seattle. We booked a few restaurants and plan on the whole bike thing in the park(s). Any can't miss things we should do? Any "best things ever" that actually suck and we should stay away from? Thanks in advance!
I think I'm looking most forward to the weather. A man of my carriage doesn't do well in the 90+ and humid weather we have coming our way. Looks like Vancouver is perfect spring weather (permanently).